Protein secretion systems play a key role in the interaction of bacteria and hosts. EffectiveDB (http://effectivedb.org) contains pre-calculated predictions of bacterial secreted proteins and of intact secretion systems. Here we describe a major update of the database, which was previously featured in the NAR Database Issue. EffectiveDB bundles various tools to recognize Type III secretion signals, conserved binding sites of Type III chaperones, Type IV secretion peptides, eukaryotic-like domains and subcellular targeting signals in the host. Beyond the analysis of arbitrary protein sequence collections, the new release of EffectiveDB also provides a ‘genome-mode’, in which protein sequences from nearly complete genomes or metagenomic bins ...
Background: Pathogenic bacteria infecting both animals as well as plants use various mechanisms to t...
International audienceBacteria with two cell membranes (diderms) have evolved complex systems for pr...
Bacterial pathogens have evolved numerous strategies to corrupt, hijack or mimic cellular processes ...
Protein secretion is a key virulence mechanism of pathogenic and symbiotic bacteria, which makes the...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
For most bacteria it is essential to secrete particular proteins, and there are several methods avai...
T346Hunter (Type Three, Four and Six secretion system Hunter) is a web-based tool for the identifica...
BACKGROUND:Pathogenic bacteria infecting both animals as well as plants use various mechanisms to tr...
T346Hunter (Type Three, Four and Six secretion system Hunter) is a web-based tool for the identifica...
The type III secretion system (TTSS) is a key mechanism for host cell interaction used by a variety ...
The type III secretion system (TTSS) is a key mechanism for host cell interaction used by a variety ...
Bacteria with two cell membranes (diderms) have evolved complex systems for protein secretion. These...
Background: Pathogenic bacteria infecting both animals as well as plants use various mechanisms to t...
International audienceBacteria with two cell membranes (diderms) have evolved complex systems for pr...
Bacterial pathogens have evolved numerous strategies to corrupt, hijack or mimic cellular processes ...
Protein secretion is a key virulence mechanism of pathogenic and symbiotic bacteria, which makes the...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
Bacteria translocate effector molecules to host cells through highly evolved secretion systems. By d...
For most bacteria it is essential to secrete particular proteins, and there are several methods avai...
T346Hunter (Type Three, Four and Six secretion system Hunter) is a web-based tool for the identifica...
BACKGROUND:Pathogenic bacteria infecting both animals as well as plants use various mechanisms to tr...
T346Hunter (Type Three, Four and Six secretion system Hunter) is a web-based tool for the identifica...
The type III secretion system (TTSS) is a key mechanism for host cell interaction used by a variety ...
The type III secretion system (TTSS) is a key mechanism for host cell interaction used by a variety ...
Bacteria with two cell membranes (diderms) have evolved complex systems for protein secretion. These...
Background: Pathogenic bacteria infecting both animals as well as plants use various mechanisms to t...
International audienceBacteria with two cell membranes (diderms) have evolved complex systems for pr...
Bacterial pathogens have evolved numerous strategies to corrupt, hijack or mimic cellular processes ...